With fewer than ten days to go until the election, John McCain is another day older and deeper in the polls.:

It
is hard to find any trend at all at the national level, although Barack
Obama's position improved has incrementally in a couple of the national
trackers. Indeed, our model now perceives that the popular vote has
been flat for roughly the past two weeks. It seems almost as though
voters made their collective decision after the second presidential
debate on October 7 -- perhaps Obama's clearest win of the series --
and decided on behalf of the Democrat.
Meanwhile, John McCain is running into some further problems at the state level. In Colorado, a Rocky Mountain News
poll now has Barack Obama 12 points ahead; McCain had led by 3 in the
RMN poll in August. Obama also leads in two polls out of Ohio; PPP
has him ahead by 7, and the University of Cincinnati / Ohio Newspapers
Poll, which had shown him trailing by 2 earlier this month, now shows
him ahead by 3.
Obama, at least, does not look to be competitive in South Dakota or Arkansas.
It will be very difficult for Obama to win more than about 397
electoral votes, which is where he'd end up if he wins all the states
where we currently have him favored, plus North Dakota, Montana,
Georgia, and Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District. Obama would have to
win West Virginia to break the 400 barrier, and I don't see that
happening; the other long shot is Arizona, which hasn't been polled in
some time.
John McCain's win percentage is now 4.3 percent, down from 5.1 percent yesterday.--Nate Silver